16 Incredible 'Game of Thrones' Easter Eggs That You Might Have Missed

Game of Thrones is awash with so many characters, confusing beasts, and countless Houses that you need to study Wikipedia for hours after each episode.

Because of this, you've potentially missed out on loads of mini in-jokes, pop culture references, and fun Easter eggs hidden inside the vast world of the Seven Kingdoms. Here is a handful of our favorites so far:

1. THE OPENING CREDITS SHOW WHERE THE EPISODE TAKES PLACE

Sort of. You're forgiven if you skip the long intro each week (even with that awesome theme tune), but in doing so you've missed out on finding out which areas (and thus which characters) are the focus that week. It's not the same every time!

However, there is a specific rule: Every episode's map must contain King's Landing, Winterfell, The Wall, and "wherever Daenerys is at the moment" (even if she doesn't appear).

2. GEORGE W BUSH'S HEAD IS SEEN ON A SPIKE

The show has become known for re-using old props from other projects. And in season one, episode 10, you can briefly see the 43rd President's head impaled on a wall in King's Landing.

Showrunners David Benioff and DB Weiss explained: "George Bush's head appears in a couple of beheading scenes. It's not a choice, it's not a political statement. We just had to use whatever head we had around."

HBO wasn't pleased with this, later saying: "We were deeply dismayed to see this and find it unacceptable, disrespectful, and in very bad taste. We made this clear to the executive producers of the series who apologized immediately for this inadvertent, careless mistake. We are sorry this happened and will have it removed from any future DVD production."

3. LITTLEFINGER CAN PREDICT THE FUTURE (KIND OF)

Does sneaky Littlefinger have a secret power we were unaware of? In season 4 episode 'The Mountain and the Viper', he tells Robin Arryn: "People die at their dinner tables. They die in their beds. They die squatting over their chamber pots. Everybody dies sooner or later."

Although Joffrey's death at his wedding had already happened at this point, this still clearly foreshadows the deaths of Shae (killed by Tyrion in her bed) and Tywin (killed by Tyrion on the toilet).

4. DAARIO LOVES MONTY PYTHON

George R.R. Martin had already written a funny nod to Monty Python in A Dance with Dragons, when a character mentioned that the Unsullied "don't break and run when someone farts in their general direction." (A reference to a line in Monty Python And The Holy Grail.)

In the show, Daario–back when he was played by Ed Skrein–defends Daenerys from a Meereenese champion by cutting his head off, but not before offering a classic John Cleese insult. Speaking in the fictional language of Old Ghiscari, he apparently says: "Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries," just like the French Taunter from The Holy Grail.

Not only that, but Winterfell scenes in the very first episode were shot at Doune Castle in Scotland, which was stood in for the Python boys' own Castle Anthrax.

5. GANDALF'S SWORD IS IN THE IRON THRONE

The Iron Throne is said to be made up of hundreds of swords and heated together using dragon fire. In reality, the prop was pieced together using lots of old swords the production team found nearby.

Among these swords is Gandalf's actual trusty Glamdring from the Lord of the Rings movies. You can clearly see it in the background.

Plus, swords from the medieval epic Kingdom of Heaven and Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves have also been spotted hiding in the Throne. Not as cool, but still.

Okay, this is probably just the production team playing a joke, but we'd like to think Jon's uncle Benjen Stark (who left the Wall and never returned) etched the letters as a clue for his nephew. You never know.

Brann Dailor later said of the experience: "I watched my best friends Brent and Bill, murdered right in front of me as I myself was stabbed in the stomach and had my throat slit multiple times, and I didn't mind at all. It made me love being in Mastodon even more."

12. GEORGE R.R. MARTIN SLIPS IN LOTS OF FOOTBALL REFERENCES

The author is a huge American football fan and has placed a couple of cheeky references to his beloved New York Giants into the books.

In A Dance With Dragons, he writes: "The galley was also where the ship's books were kept... the fourth and final volume of The Life of the Triarch Belicho, a famous Volantene patriot whose unbroken succession of conquests and triumphs ended rather abruptly when he was eaten by giants." This is a reference to the New York Giants' Super Bowl victory over the previously undefeated New England Patriots (and their head coach Bill Belichick).

Also, the giant Wun Wun gets his name from former Giants quarterback Phil Simms, who wore number 11 on his jersey.

13. THE THREE STOOGES GET A NOD

In the first book, A Game of Thrones, Catelyn arrests Tyrion with the help of three knights from House Bracken.

Their names? Lharys, Mohor, and Kurleket. Clearly a Westeros take on Larry, Moe, and Curly.

14. OBERYN'S DEMISE WAS TEASED WAY IN ADVANCE

If you had read the books, then you knew full well that the crushing end of Oberyn Martell was coming at the hands of The Mountain.

For the rest of us, we still had no idea, even when actors Pedro Pascal and Lena Headey essentially gave away the ending:

Before this, Pedro had also alluded to the death, when discussing his love for Captain Crunch cereal on Reddit:

Cheeky gits!

15. DRAGONSLAYER AND GAME OF THRONES ARE IN THE SAME UNIVERSE

Of course not really. But according to Viserys, there was a dragon bearing the same name as the evil beastie from the 1981 fantasy epic.

While waffling on about the skulls of dead dragons that were once ridden by brave men in the past, he mentions Vermithrax. In the film, it's called Vermithrax Pejorative.

16. THE SHOWRUNNERS ARE IN THE HALL OF FACES

In the creepy Return To Oz-style Hall of Faces belonging to the Faceless Men, the production team hid a couple of familiar heads in the mix.

Co-creators David Benioff and Dan Weiss were among the countless faces, while the head that Arya touches belonged to the mother of Barry Gower, the prosthetics supervisor for the show.

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